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Planetary Discovery in the era of Spacecraft Exploration Xi Zhang

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Presentation on theme: "Planetary Discovery in the era of Spacecraft Exploration Xi Zhang"— Presentation transcript:

1 Xi Zhang E&MS A261 <xiz@ucsc.edu>
Planetary Discovery in the era of Spacecraft Exploration Xi Zhang E&MS A261 TA: Szilard Gyalay

2 Mid-term 50 questions, 65 min. High 47, Low 25, median 36
Easiest (100%), Hardest (20%) Scantron from TA in the discussion sections.

3 Mid-term Results

4 Today’s Outline Atmosphere of Terrestrial Planets (Chap. 10)

5 Planetary Atmospheres: Earth and the Other Terrestrial Worlds
An atmosphere is a layer of gas that surrounds a world.

6 Earth's Atmosphere About 10 kilometers thick
Consists mostly of molecular nitrogen (N2) and oxygen (O2).

7 Atmospheric Pressure Pressure and density decrease with altitude because the weight of overlying layers is less. Earth's pressure at sea level is: 1.03 kg per sq. cm 14.7 lb per sq. inch about 1 bar about 105 Pa

8 Where does an atmosphere end?
There is no clear upper boundary. Most of Earth's gas is less than 10 kilometers from surface, but a small fraction extends to more than 100 kilometers. Altitudes more than 100 kilometers are considered "space."

9 Where does an atmosphere end?
Small amounts of gas are present even above 300 kilometers.

10 Effects of Atmospheres
They create pressure that determines whether liquid water can exist on surface. They absorb and scatter light. They create wind, weather, and climate. They interact with the solar wind to create a magnetosphere. They can make planetary surfaces warmer through the greenhouse effect.

11 Planetary Temperature
A planet's surface temperature is determined by the balance between energy from sunlight it absorbs and energy of outgoing thermal radiation.

12 Temperature and Rotation
A planet's distance from the Sun determines the total amount of incoming sunlight. A planet's rotation rate affects the temperature differences between day and night.

13 Temperature and Reflectivity
A planet's reflectivity (or albedo) is the fraction of incoming sunlight it reflects. Planets with low albedo absorb more sunlight, leading to hotter temperatures.

14 "No Greenhouse" Temperatures
Venus would be 510°C colder without greenhouse effect. Earth would be 31°C colder (below freezing on average).

15 Greenhouse Effect Visible light passes through the atmosphere and warms a planet's surface. The atmosphere absorbs infrared light from the surface, trapping heat.

16 What do atmospheric properties vary with altitude?

17

18 Light's Effects on Atmosphere
Ionization: removal of an electron Dissociation: destruction of a molecule Scattering: change in photon's direction Absorption: photon's energy is absorbed.

19 Light's Effects on Atmosphere
X rays and UV light can ionize and dissociate molecules. Molecules tend to scatter blue light more than red. Molecules can absorb infrared light.

20 Earth's Atmospheric Structure

21 Recall: transmission in Atmosphere
Only radio and visible light pass easily through Earth's atmosphere. We need telescopes in space to observe other forms.

22 Earth's Atmospheric Structure
Troposphere: lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere Temperature drops with altitude. Warmed by infrared light from surface and convection

23 Earth's Atmospheric Structure
Stratosphere: layer above the troposphere Temperature rises with altitude. Warmed by absorption of ultraviolet sunlight by ozone.

24 Earth's Atmospheric Structure
Mesosphere: layer above the stratosphere Temperature decreases again with altitude.

25 Earth's Atmospheric Structure
Thermosphere: layer at about 100 kilometers altitude Temperature rises with altitude. X rays and ultraviolet light from the Sun heat and ionize gases.

26 Earth's Atmospheric Structure
Exosphere: highest layer in which atmosphere gradually fades into space Temperature rises with altitude; atoms can escape into space. Warmed by X rays and UV light

27 Origin of Color

28 Quiz: Why is the Sky blue?

29 Why the Sky is blue? Atmosphere scatters blue light from Sun, making it appear to come from different directions. Sunsets are red because red light scatters less.

30 Atmospheres of Other Planets
Earth has a stratosphere because of UV-absorbing ozone molecules (O3). Those same molecules protect us from Sun's UV light. "No greenhouse" temperatures

31 Earth's Magnetosphere Magnetic field of Earth's atmosphere protects us from charged particles streaming from Sun (the solar wind).

32 Aurora Charged particles from solar wind energize the upper atmosphere near magnetic poles, causing an aurora.

33 How does the greenhouse effect warm a planet?
What is an atmosphere? A layer of gas that surrounds a world How does the greenhouse effect warm a planet? Atmospheric molecules allow visible sunlight to warm a planet's surface but absorb infrared photons, trapping the heat. Why do atmospheric properties vary with altitude? They depend on how atmospheric gases interact with sunlight at different altitudes.

34 What creates wind and weather?

35 Weather and Climate Weather is the ever-varying combination of wind, clouds, temperature, and pressure. Local complexity of weather makes it difficult to predict. Climate is the long-term average of weather. Long-term stability of climate depends on global conditions and is more predictable.

36 Weather: clouds and precipitation


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